Gedanohelea liaoningensis, Steber, Szadziewski & Wang, 2016

Stebner, Frauke, Szadziewski, Ryszard & Wang, Bo, 2016, Biting midges (Diptera: Ceratopogonidae) in Fushun amber reveal further biotic links between Asia and Europe during the Eocene, Palaeontologia Electronica 31 (9), pp. 1-9 : 4-7

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.26879/597

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:B38CB37D-3BF7-4D37-BA0C-102BC9DFE430

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/F996CF73-439C-4A48-8C69-5C451B709E68

taxon LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:act:F996CF73-439C-4A48-8C69-5C451B709E68

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Gedanohelea liaoningensis
status

sp. nov.

Gedanohelea liaoningensis View in CoL n. sp.

Figures 3.1, 3.3 View FIGURE 3 , 5.1-6 View FIGURE 5 View FIGURE 6

zoobank/ F996CF73-439C-4A48-8C69-5C451B709E68

1. Fore femur slightly swollen ( Figure 2.5 View FIGURE 2 ). Apex of fore tibia without prolongation M. sinica n. sp

-. Fore femur greatly swollen. Apex of fore tibia with distinct prolongation 2

2. Palpal segment 4 slightly shorter than palpal segment 3 M. laca ( Meunier, 1904)

-. Palpal segment 4 almost 2 times shorter than palpal segment 3 M. gedanica Szadziewski, 1988

Material. Holotype female NIGP156998 View Materials . Deposited at the Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology, Chinese Academy of Sciences.

Etymology. The specific epithet refers to the province of Liaoning, from where the amber is collected.

Diagnosis. The species can be distinguished by having wing veins M 1 and M 2 slightly divergent, vein M 1 reaching wing margin at acute angle, and palpal segments 3–4 cylindrical. Males unknown.

Description. Female. Dark brown to black in colour, both antennae broken. Total body length (including head) 0.91 mm.

Head. Flagellum length 0.39 mm, AR 0.92. Antenna with 13 cylindrical flagellomeres, both antennae broken beyond flagellomere 8 but distal 5 flagellomeres of left antenna preserved and dis-

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4

mm

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tinctly elongate, last flagellomere longest ( Figure 5.1 View FIGURE 5 ). Palpus ( Figure 5.3 View FIGURE 5 ) short, most probably with five segments but only terminal three segments clearly visible and about 0.054 mm in length, palpal segment three cylindrical, apparently not distinctly broader than following segments.

Thorax. Hind basitarsus with row of palisade setae. Tarsomeres 2–4 short, tarsomere 4 cordiform, tarsomere 5 longer than preceding one but shorter than combined length of tarsomeres 2–4. Tibial comb composed of at least six spines. Claws single on all legs; claw of foreleg ( Figure 5.4 View FIGURE 5 ) as long as tarsomere 5, claw of mid- and hind legs shorter ( Figure 5.5-6 View FIGURE 5 View FIGURE 6 ). TR(I) 2.67, TR(II)?, TR(III) 3.57. Wing length 0.65 mm, CR 0.51. Ratio of divergence between M 1 and M 2: 0.25. Veins M 1 and M 2 slightly divergent, M 1 reaching wing margin at acute angle ( Figure 5.2 View FIGURE 5 ).

Remarks. Gedanohelea liaoningensis n. sp. and Gedanohelea fushunensis n. sp. closely resemble each other. The only character that separates both species is the shape of the M veins, which are less divergent in G. liaoningensis . In G. fushunensis M 1 meets the wing margin at right angle, while M 1 reaches the wing margin at acute angle in G. liaoningensis .

Having tarsomere 5 of foreleg distinctly shorter than combined length of tarsomeres 2–4, and the claw of foreleg almost as long as tarsomere 5 Gedanohelea liaoningensis and G. fushunensis resemble the Baltic amber species G. loewi . The species differ from each other in the shape of palpal segment 3, which is almost spherical and bearing a small round sensory pit in Gedanohelea loewi but cylindrical in the two Fushun amber species and with a broad oval sensory pit in G. fushunensis . Furthermore, in G. fushunensis vein M 1 meets the wing margin exactly at 90 o instead of an acute angle as in G. loewi .

G. fushunensis can be separated from Gedanohelea wirthi by the length of the claws, which are short on all legs in G. wirthi whereas the claw of the foreleg is long in G. fushunensis , and by the lower ratio of divergence of wing veins M 1 and M 2, which is 0.29 in G. fushunensis and 0.34 in G. wirthi ( Table 2).

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4

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Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Diptera

Family

Ceratopogonidae

Genus

Gedanohelea

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